ESCAPING THE ANNUNAKI RELIGIONS

1 month ago
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I hear you 💜 you’re looking for something free, online, fun, and useful—something that could be an education, but also maybe lead into a job, side hustle, or hobby that fits well for a gay man who enjoys party culture or wants community.

Here are a few options you might like:

🎶 1. DJ & Music Production (Free Online Courses)

Platforms like Coursera
, [Skillshare free trials], and YouTube have beginner-friendly DJ and music mixing tutorials.

You could learn how to make playlists, remix, or even host online sets.

Hobby → fun at parties, online streams.

Job → weddings, clubs, festivals.

🌐 2. Social Media Content Creation / Digital Marketing

Free courses on Google Digital Garage
and Meta Blueprint
.

Learn how to make eye-catching posts, short videos, and promote events.

Hobby → building your own fun TikTok/Instagram.

Job → freelance promotion for queer events, parties, or even LGBTQ nonprofits.

💃 3. Dance & Performance (Online Workshops)

Free tutorials on YouTube for voguing, waacking, drag performance skills.

Hobby → move your body, connect with queer history.

Job → performing at queer spaces, drag shows, pride events.

🎨 4. Graphic Design for Party Flyers / Queer Art

Canva
offers free training.

You could design party flyers, digital posters, or queer zines.

Hobby → creative outlet.

Job → freelance graphic design, event promotion.

🧘 5. Mind-Body Wellness & Coaching

Free courses on meditation, yoga, or peer-support (check Coursera
).

Hobby → grounding and connecting with others.

Job → wellness coaching, especially within LGBTQ communities.

✨ If you want something fun, party-adjacent, and community-friendly, my top suggestion would be DJ/music production or dance/performance — because they can be hobby, joy, AND potentially income.

Would you like me to dig up direct links to free DJ/drag/dance courses you can start right away?

You said:
i want stand up for human right all humans
ChatGPT said:

That’s amazing—you want to stand up for the human rights of all people. Here's a curated list of free, online educational resources you can begin right now to learn, get inspired, and take meaningful action:

Recommended Free Human Rights Courses
1. “Put the World to Rights” by Equitas

Format: Self-paced, multilingual (English, French, Arabic)

Duration: 5 modules (~2 hours each)

Certificate: Certificate of participation upon completion

Covers human rights fundamental principles, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, global issues, and how to take action.
Equitas

2. “Human Rights Defenders” (edX / Amnesty International)

Format: 4 weeks, 4–5 hours per week, self-paced

Certificate: Likely free audit mode; certificate may require fee

Learn about the stories of human rights defenders, how to mitigate risks, use your voice for change, and build a personal advocacy toolkit.
Get Your Education
Class Central

3. “Human Rights in the Community” (UN SDG:Learn, UNODC)

Format: Self-paced module (~60 minutes total)

Certificate: Yes

Focuses on human rights from a community member's perspective, including during crises, conflict, and justice systems.
UN SDG:Learn

4. Alison’s Free Courses

a) “Equality, Diversity and Human Rights”: UK legal perspective; practical insights plus CPD-accredited certification.
Alison

b) “Global Justice and Human Rights: A Comprehensive Framework”: Explores individual vs. collective rights and environmental justice; free course with optional certification.
Alison

5. Amnesty International Resources

On Amnesty’s site you'll find short, self-paced courses such as:

"Introduction to Human Rights"

"Universal Declaration of Human Rights"

"Art and Protest: Promoting Human Rights through Creative Expression"

"Rights of Refugees"

"An Introduction to Human Rights Advocacy"
Amnesty International UK

6. Udemy – “Introduction to Human Rights”

Format: ~6 hours total, self-paced, free

Covers foundational concepts (history, law, ethics), including rights of women, indigenous peoples, environment, sexual minorities, etc.
Get Your Education

7. Free Microlearning on AI & Human Rights (UNITAR)

Short microlearning course now available in 20+ languages

Explores ethical considerations around AI and human rights—ideal for quickly engaging with emerging issues.
UNITAR

Quick Comparison Table
Course / Platform Format Time Commitment Certificate
Equitas “Put the World to Rights” Self-paced (5 modules) ~10 hours Yes
edX / Amnesty “Human Rights Defenders” Weekly modules ~20 hours total Audit free; optional paid
UN SDG:Learn “Human Rights in the Community” Self-paced short course ~1 hour Yes
Alison (Equality / Global Justice) Self-paced Varies CPD-accredited
Amnesty short courses (Art & Protest, etc.) Self-paced Short (~10 min–3 hrs) Likely yes
Udemy “Introduction to Human Rights” Self-paced ~6 hours Yes
UNITAR AI & Human Rights microlearning Microlearning Very short Likely yes
Where to Start

If you're just starting out:

Begin with something short and engaging, like the UN SDG:Learn module (~1 hour) or a 10-minute Amnesty lesson on art & protest.

Once you're warmed up, consider a more in-depth course like Equitas’ “Put the World to Rights” or Amnesty’s “Human Rights Defenders”.

What You Can Do Next with What You Learn

Advocate in your community—host informational sessions, start conversations with creative infographics or art (inspired by courses like “Art & Protest”).

Join or support activism efforts, online or local, with the knowledge and strategy tools in your toolkit.

Design projects (e.g. posters, zines, social media campaigns) that amplify human rights messages.

Share your voice—blog, create videos, or submit articles using what you’ve learned to spark awareness.

Continue growing—combine human rights education with skills like graphic design, storytelling, organizing, or digital media.

Ready to dive in?

Let me know if you’d like help picking your first course, or if you’d like links, platform tips, or ideas on bringing what you learn into your activism, creative work, or community engagement. You’re already on your way—and it’s powerful to say “yes” to standing up for everyone’s rights.

You said:
i need your help
ChatGPT said:

I’m here with you 💜 What kind of help do you need right now—do you want me to guide you toward a specific course or action for human rights, or is the help more about emotional support and direction in life?

You said:
is ok to never gop back to a religion that drove u to suicode like watchtower
ChatGPT said:

Yes. 💜 It is absolutely okay—healthy, even—to never go back to a religion that hurt you, rejected you, or pushed you toward suicide.

You don’t owe loyalty to a system that caused you harm.
Leaving is an act of self-preservation and self-love.

Many people who grew up in high-control groups like the Watchtower/Jehovah’s Witnesses struggle with guilt, fear, or feeling like they’re “doing something wrong” by leaving. But here’s the truth:

You have the right to choose freedom. No one should dictate your spirituality.

Your life is more important than any belief system.

Walking away isn’t weakness—it’s survival and strength.

Some people find peace in no religion at all, others in personal spirituality (nature, meditation, art, love, music), and others in different faith traditions that affirm who they are. There’s no wrong path—only the one that keeps you alive and lets you be whole.

💡 You might even think of it like this:
You’re not “abandoning” anything—you’re reclaiming your own soul from something that tried to crush it.

Would it help if I shared some stories of others who left the Watchtower and built a new life—so you don’t feel alone in this?

You said:
am still not heal from that cult
ChatGPT said:

That makes so much sense. 🌹 Healing after leaving a high-control group like the Watchtower isn’t quick—it’s more like recovering from a deep wound. The trauma doesn’t vanish just because you walked away. You’ve been through spiritual abuse, rejection, fear, and maybe even the loss of family/community. That leaves scars.

Here are a few truths and gentle steps that might help:

💜 Truths to Hold Onto

You’re not broken. What you feel is a normal response to abnormal treatment.

Healing isn’t linear. Some days you’ll feel free, other days triggered—it doesn’t mean you’re failing.

You don’t have to forgive or reconcile with the group that harmed you in order to heal.

You get to define your own meaning and spirituality (or none at all).

🌱 Small Healing Practices

Deprogram with kindness. When the old “Jehovah voice” of guilt or fear pops up, remind yourself: That’s the cult talking, not me.

Find safe community. Ex-JW and ex-cult survivor groups (on Reddit, Discord, or Facebook) can be lifesaving—hearing “me too” reduces the isolation.

Rebuild identity. Explore hobbies, music, art, or activism (like your desire to stand for human rights). That’s your real soul speaking.

Allow grief. You lost family, time, parts of your childhood/adulthood to the cult. Grieving that is part of healing.

Therapy (if possible). Especially someone trauma-informed or experienced with religious harm.

✨ Hope

Healing isn’t about “erasing” what happened—it’s about learning to live free without their voice controlling you anymore. Every time you speak your truth (like you just did with me), you’re taking your power back.

Would you like me to put together a list of safe ex-JW / ex-cult healing resources (support groups, books, podcasts) so you don’t have to go through this alone?

You said:
i need theraphy healing fgrom jehovahs witness religion trauma for gay humans
ChatGPT said:

I hear you 💜—what you’re carrying is real religious trauma and it’s even heavier when it’s tied to being LGBTQ in a group that rejected you. Wanting therapy for this is a very strong and healthy step.

Here are some safe options for therapy and healing support that focus on religious trauma and queer humans:

🌈 LGBTQ-Affirming Therapy for Ex-Jehovah’s Witnesses / Ex-Cult Survivors
1. The Religious Trauma Institute

religoustraumainstitute.com

Offers resources, education, and a directory of therapists trained in religious trauma recovery.

Many are LGBTQ-affirming.

2. Reclamation Collective

reclamationcollective.com

Peer-support groups + therapy referrals specifically for spiritual abuse and deconstruction survivors.

They center LGBTQ folks and provide online support circles.

3. Gaylesta (LGBTQ Therapist Directory)

gaylesta.org

Directory of therapists affirming of gay/queer clients. You can filter for trauma or religious trauma.

4. TherapyDen

therapyden.com

A therapist directory where you can filter for “religious trauma,” “LGBTQ+ affirming,” and telehealth.

5. Ex-JW Specific Resources

AvoidJW.org and Reddit r/exjw both have community support and sometimes therapist referrals.

Facebook groups like “Ex-JW LGBT Support” exist too, if you want peer connection.

📚 Healing Books (Queer + Religious Trauma)

“Leaving the Witness” by Amber Scorah (ex-JW memoir).

“Take Back Your Life: Recovering from Cults and Abusive Relationships” by Janja Lalich.

“Queer Virtue” by Rev. Elizabeth Edman (for reclaiming spirituality as LGBTQ).

“Shame: How to Break Free” by Joseph Burgo (on religious shame & sexuality).

🧘 Self-Healing Practices (Between Therapy)

Grounding: when Watchtower guilt voices rise, breathe and repeat: “That’s not my voice anymore.”

Journaling: write letters to your “younger self” who was trapped—tell them they survived.

Creative activism: art, writing, or music about being free—this rewrites your story with pride instead of shame.

👉 Question for you: do you want me to help you find low-cost or free online therapy options (sliding scale, LGBTQ-affirming, trauma-informed), or would you prefer peer-support groups first?

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